1,237 research outputs found
Balancing Relevance and Diversity in Online Bipartite Matching via Submodularity
In bipartite matching problems, vertices on one side of a bipartite graph are
paired with those on the other. In its online variant, one side of the graph is
available offline, while the vertices on the other side arrive online. When a
vertex arrives, an irrevocable and immediate decision should be made by the
algorithm; either match it to an available vertex or drop it. Examples of such
problems include matching workers to firms, advertisers to keywords, organs to
patients, and so on. Much of the literature focuses on maximizing the total
relevance---modeled via total weight---of the matching. However, in many
real-world problems, it is also important to consider contributions of
diversity: hiring a diverse pool of candidates, displaying a relevant but
diverse set of ads, and so on. In this paper, we propose the Online Submodular
Bipartite Matching (\osbm) problem, where the goal is to maximize a submodular
function over the set of matched edges. This objective is general enough to
capture the notion of both diversity (\emph{e.g.,} a weighted coverage
function) and relevance (\emph{e.g.,} the traditional linear function)---as
well as many other natural objective functions occurring in practice
(\emph{e.g.,} limited total budget in advertising settings). We propose novel
algorithms that have provable guarantees and are essentially optimal when
restricted to various special cases. We also run experiments on real-world and
synthetic datasets to validate our algorithms.Comment: To appear in AAAI 201
Robust Assignments via Ear Decompositions and Randomized Rounding
Many real-life planning problems require making a priori decisions before all
parameters of the problem have been revealed. An important special case of such
problem arises in scheduling problems, where a set of tasks needs to be
assigned to the available set of machines or personnel (resources), in a way
that all tasks have assigned resources, and no two tasks share the same
resource. In its nominal form, the resulting computational problem becomes the
\emph{assignment problem} on general bipartite graphs.
This paper deals with a robust variant of the assignment problem modeling
situations where certain edges in the corresponding graph are \emph{vulnerable}
and may become unavailable after a solution has been chosen. The goal is to
choose a minimum-cost collection of edges such that if any vulnerable edge
becomes unavailable, the remaining part of the solution contains an assignment
of all tasks.
We present approximation results and hardness proofs for this type of
problems, and establish several connections to well-known concepts from
matching theory, robust optimization and LP-based techniques.Comment: Full version of ICALP 2016 pape
Proceedings of the 8th Cologne-Twente Workshop on Graphs and Combinatorial Optimization
International audienceThe Cologne-Twente Workshop (CTW) on Graphs and Combinatorial Optimization started off as a series of workshops organized bi-annually by either Köln University or Twente University. As its importance grew over time, it re-centered its geographical focus by including northern Italy (CTW04 in Menaggio, on the lake Como and CTW08 in Gargnano, on the Garda lake). This year, CTW (in its eighth edition) will be staged in France for the first time: more precisely in the heart of Paris, at the Conservatoire National d’Arts et Métiers (CNAM), between 2nd and 4th June 2009, by a mixed organizing committee with members from LIX, Ecole Polytechnique and CEDRIC, CNAM
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